Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑October 24th, 2022, 8:23 amBy "even the score", I think you mean have eliminated statistical disparities between the two groups. So you are merely re-stating what we already know; that "equity" is only concerned with the outcome. But, by definition, if the institutional discrimination has been removed, they are no longer disadvantaged. Members of the previously disadvantaged group now have just as much chance of achieving as members of the previously advantaged group have.Fried Egg wrote: ↑October 23rd, 2022, 12:55 pm It is not a matter that equality does not go far enough, it is that equity is at odds with equality. They are incompatible.After a prolonged period of inequality, merely instituting equality does not even the score. A short period of equity is necessary to allow the disadvantaged to catch up with the rest who have enjoyed the benefits, got used to them, and learned how to use them to best advantage. Once the disadvantaged have caught up, equality is all that is necessary. But, to allow that just and deserved catch-up period, equity is the only answer, I think.
I think that the advocates of "equity" are maybe trying to say that even after the removal of institutional discrimination, there might remain some non institutional discrimination in place (i.e. individuals who harbour their own prejudices) and this is why statistical disparities remain. There are two problems with this idea though:
1) Disparities might persist for other reasons (i.e. personal or cultural reasons). Therefore attempting to forcibly remove them is actually bad for society (and the group you're supposedly trying to help).
2) If there is a genuine persistence of individual prejudice, do quotas (or any of the other tools of the trade) actually help remove these prejudices? I would think it is highly unlikely. In which case, they serve no purpose other than give the illusion that the problem has disappeared.
You have repeatedly suggested that policies aimed at achieving equity are only ever temporary and can eventually be removed (when they are no longer necessary). I am quite skeptical of this Has there ever been a quota that has been removed because it's deemed no longer necessary? I would suggest that they never have because they fail to do what they are designed to achieve for one (or both) of the reasons above.